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Friday, June 18, 2010

The Last Day of School - 6-18-10

The last day of school. Good God. Even though the last couple of weeks have been the easiest of the year, with no SOLs to prepare for, no lessons to plan, and far less stress about paperwork than everyone else has been feeling, I’m exhausted. I should have left school today jubilant, exultant, singing to the heavens, wriggling with joy. Instead, with every mile I put between me and the school, my mood darkened and my brow lowered. I could read the signs: I was brooding. And have been since I left.

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And I have better indication, ironically, than I’ve ever had on any other last day because I am going to be contacted by Central Corp. for a second interview. I never wrote about that, I realize. Other things crowding my mind, I suppose. Yeah, the day after I wrote that journal entry during Spring Break about job-hunting oh-so-reluctantly with Mom, Central Corp. returned my call and invited me in for an interview the next week, and that interview was smashing. My, how I’ve grown in two years. I don’t even recognize myself now. And my worry aboutnot being able to distinguish between a job I wanted on its own merit and one I just saw as an escape was nullified. I want this job. I want to work for this company. I want to be a member of this family. And as the weeks wore on after the interview, I also came to realize that what I had at one time thought was my ideal job – College Textbook Sales Representative – for which I really would be perfect, was actually not so perfect for me. I don’t want to have anything even remotely connected to education, even college education. I shouldn’t have to devote one more iota of my energy to education when I get a new job and am released.

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I have done enough. I have served my sentence, done my time, without complaint for many months, and I am due for parole. It’s time for me to rejoin the human race. And I truly believe I have earned Central Corp.

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So why should I be brooding? I think part of it is I am so ready for my life to change, for all these countless seeds I have been faithfully planting to begin sprouting. I honestly don’t remember what it’s like to have fun in my life or to look forward to my life. I know now what it is to have faith that something good is in store, but the feeling of experiencing it in the here and now has been harder to find in the last two years than Sasquatch. I’m ready to know what it’s like not to have to marshal my forces every damn morning, not to dread my life, not to be alone in this. So part of my brooding is that readiness.

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But most of it, I think, is just plain exhaustion. I think, now that I don’t have to muster the troops for tomorrow, and then another tomorrow, and still another tomorrow, now that I’ve reached my last tomorrow, the sheer mass of the year is now crashing down on me. I’m allowed now to really feel just how hard this year has been.

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But through that diamond-hard weariness is the truth of which I can be proud.

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This year has yielded a lot of harvest. This past year has taught me to suffer in silence and alone. How to be stoic where I once was whining. I know what it is to fail and not give up, to fail and get back up and try again tomorrow, to fail and get back up and try again tomorrow, to fail and get back up and try again tomorrow. I know now what it is to keep falling short of the mark and still see the worth in my efforts, to still see the integrity of my purpose – not to be a great teacher or impact these children’s lives, but to honor and glorify God, to obey what he has told me to do. I know now, as I never did, that the commandment to love your enemies is not a suggestion and isn’t always defined by those who hate you. Sometimes it’s those you yourself hate. I learned what it is to struggle with hatred that just wouldn’t go away and let God show me how to show love even when I didn’t feel it, because he loves them.

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I know, because of this year, how to believe. When all fails and sight is gone and there’s nothing to believe in anymore, to yet believe. I have learned how strong I am and how much stronger God is. I can stand and fight and be stubborn and not give in. I’ve seen worth in what I’ve thought worthless and hope when hope had run out.

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I have discovered my name and my purpose. I know my identity in Christ and for the first time understood that Jesus dying and rising again wasn’t just to save me from a life of sin. That never had the impact on me it had on others who’d crawled the green mile of life. I was a goody-two-shoes raised in a bubble – what great sin had I ever managed to get into? But because he did what he did, I have God’s Spirit in me always, even when I fall short of the mark for the four-hundredth time and just don’t see how to do better. I never have to be separated from God by anything now, which is so very essential. I couldn’t do all this without him. I wouldn’t still be breathing on this earth if not for him staying close by my side.

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I’ve learned that when my resources are low and all is dark and the last feeling has fled and I feel so alone, I can still be absolutely certain God is right there, so close he is breathing on me in the blackness. That is huge – that my faith and my feelings can diverge and after thirty years, my faith wins out.

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I know now what it is to stand on what I know in my heart in the face of 360˚ opposition, and not back down.

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Yes, I have seen worth in the worthless and I will continue to see more worth emerge for the rest of my life from this worthless career. I have been changed, callused from my trek in the wilderness which is probably not over yet, and my family and my people will benefit from that for generations to come.

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So let the brooding, bone-deep exhaustion wash over me. It’ll end and I’ll still be here, waiting for the first bloom to finally show.

Sunday, June 13, 2010

Should I or Shouldn't I? - 6-13-10

A couple of words I’ve received lately have been urging me to “share the burden” with someone. At first I was completely confounded: with whom would I share this utterly bizarre, foolish path I’ve been trekking alone? Who would possibly not only accept it but embrace it with me?

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As I thought and prayed about it, my parents kept coming to mind. But how can that be when they’re already questioning my mental health? Jeez, they’d commit me straight-out if they knew the full truth.

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And that’s what has kept nudging me: they don’t know the entirety of the situation. They’re like the blind mice from the story who are feeling different parts of an elephant and claiming it’s a rope, it’s a tree trunk, it’s a snake, never getting close to the truth because they’re blind.

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It wasn’t until I suddenly was faced with the possibility that this separation experience, which very recently has begun to wear, might be nearing its end that I was able to even conceive of another scenario. It could be that my parents, who’ve supported me in every other venture before even when they’ve had their misgivings or reservations, would just feel relief that they finally know the nature of the beast they’ve been struggling with.

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And what if they don’t in fact think I’m crazy or dangerously foolish or mentally unbalanced when they read my entire blog of these journal entries? What if, once they’ve gotten over the shock, they prove once again to be the essentially practical people I’ve always known and get down to the business of dealing with what is actually on the table, whether they expected it or not? Maybe it’s time they see that the beast they’ve been mistakenly identifying is actually the elephant in the room.

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I’m praying over this. That really goes without saying. My concern is to protect them from as much worry and anxiety as I can. I’ve been trying to do that since December. But how effective have I been when they know no rest or peace about my situation, however much I reassure them that everything will work out and I’ll be fine?

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I have thought of all these journal entries to be not so much my story but God’s. This is what will show everyone when this journey is finally at an end and all my longings and efforts resolved that it was the Lord who did all this. That all of this was impossibility squared and he made it work out perfectly and beautifully. I’ve thought how much of an encouragement my story would be for so many people struggling for faith in this faithless world. But maybe for my parents, that would best be accomplished if they didn’t learn of this journey at the end but rather now, at this particular point, so they can help me along. It was from my meeting with B____ and all the wrestling that followed that my parents’ faith actually began to be revived. My father prayed over me in December, taking authority over his family in the mess of my hemorrhaging heart. My mother offered godly perspectives and advice even though she struggled so much with God. So it could indeed be not only for my relief but for their great good that I bring them into the light of full disclosure. I need a little more confirmation from the Holy Spirit before I commit to this; there’s no going back if I do. There’s no “unknowing” if the worst reaction happens. But it is actually possible that they would take into consideration the nature of this woman they’ve known for three decades and remember that she is not foolish or heedless. She thinks and considers and gives heed to wisdom. And if she says there is no one else, maybe, just maybe, she’s right. And maybe, just maybe, it is her stubbornness that writes a happy ending.

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And who knows? Maybe if all three of us were united in this purpose that has no remedy, no cure, it’ll bring all this to its crescendo all the more quickly. After all, when two or more are gathered in his name, there the Lord is. And when my father prayed over me with my mother that horrible December night, my broken heart was bound far faster than it otherwise would have. I shudder to think how I would have scraped through my days and awful nights for however long if he hadn’t brought me under God’s hand and if I hadn’t remained obedient.

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But I am deeply concerned for them, for their peace of mind. And my question is which option will build their faith, show them God more clearly, and bring them peace of mind: keeping them in the dark or bringing them into the full truth? I’m not so concerned for me. I don’t worry for my resolve. I have brought my desires and my boundless love into obedience to God for too long for it not to be sanctified. And I now know that that question, “If B____ is really what you want, are you willing to wait as long as it takes?” was indeed from God. He didn’t really give confirmation beyond the follow-up question, “Will God not move you away from this purpose if it is not from him? Has he not shown himself worthy of that trust?” The real confirmation came with time. It came as I realized that just as there was no one else for thirty years, there will never be anyone else. I was designed for one man alone. I was a freak for so long I got used to standing alone and it was a good thing – I had the resolve to wait for him as long as it takes. I don’t know if it’s how I was raised or how I was made, but I have never been able to settle for less than the best. I wait for the best, whether it comes or not. I know I was created this way as truly, as solidly, as I know God exists. This is how I was made. So no argument will stand against that. You can say it is foolish and incorrect, that B____ will never come back, that I am setting myself up for a lifetime of barren loneliness, that I am just afraid of moving on, that I’m crazy, you name it, I’ve either heard it or thought it. And I have no rebuttal. I am the worst lawyer in this case. I simply smile, shrug, and say, “That’s how I’m made.” And I have thirty years and a lot of dates behind me to back it up. There will never be anyone else. And if it’s just a matter of waiting, so be it.

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And I have definitely faced the argument that every day that passes is one less day my eggs are viable. The science backs it up. The testimonies of those older women are all heartbreakingly true. But that’s 2 Corinthians 10:5 right there: I am in obedience to God in this. I have received confirmation after confirmation that I am exactly where I’m supposed to be in my life. So I refuse those “lofty thinking and arguments and pretensions and theories” and take every thought captive. I take them. God’s not the one who’s supposed to do that.

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And hey, let’s face it, my God can do anything he wants. He made a virgin conceive – uh, what? That’s not physically possible. And he made an old, barren womb fertile. I have been obedient. And as surely as I know I was born for B____ M____, I know I was made to have children. Every day of my life has been building a legacy for them. They are the reason for all this.

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So we’ll see what happens. We’ll see if my parents can be trusted with this unheard-of truth and if they can support me. And we’ll see what miracles God can work in their long-wearied faith. After all, my parents are “my people,” too, along with the M____ clan and Jessica and Bryan. And they are marked for freedom and fullness.

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“The weapons we fight with are not the weapons of the world. On the contrary, they have divine power to demolish strongholds. We demolish arguments and every pretension that sets itself up against the knowledge of God, and we take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ.”

-- 2 Corinthians 10:4-5

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“And this is my prayer: that your love may abound more and more in knowledge and depth of insight, so that you may be able to discern what is best and may be pure and blameless until the day of Christ.”

-- Philippians 1:9

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“Continue to work out your salvation with fear and trembling, for it is God who works in you to will and to act according to his great purpose.”

-- Philippians 2:12-13

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“For this reason, we have not stopped praying for you and asking God to fill you with the knowledge of his will through all spiritual wisdom and understanding. And we pray this in order that you may live a life worthy of the Lord and my please him in every way, bearing fruit in every good work, growing in the knowledge of God, being strengthened with all power according to his glorious might so that you might have great endurance and patience, and joyfully giving thanks to the Father who has qualified you to share in the inheritance of the saints in the kingdom of light.”

-- Colossians 1:9-12

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What if . . . just what if . . . I’m not crazy, people? What if this really is going to happen and all these people I have claimed are actually going to see the fruition of all these verses? What if God really does still perform miracles?

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What if?

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Those are gloriously liberating, terrifyingly limitless words. Amen!

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“We pray . . . that by his power he may fulfill every good purpose of yours and every act prompted by faith.”

-- 2 Thessalonians 1:11

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“Let us hold unswervingly to the hope we profess, for he who promised is faithful.”

-- Hebrews 10:23

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“Now faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see.”

-- Hebrews 11:1

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Code-Red - 6-8-10

My parents have gone code-red on my non-existent dating situation. Asking me point-blank if I’m still secretly waiting for B____ to come back (thank heavens for verbal dexterity so I can throw them off the scent without lying), doing Match.com again for me, sending me profiles, and finally asking me tonight to see a professional again like I used to because one shouldn’t hate and dread dating as much as I do (the disadvantage of throwing them off the B____ scent was over-emphasizing the I-don’t-want-to-date scent).

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Had this come up a year ago, which, well, it had, many times – I would have caved under the deluge of doubts fostered by others’ honest concern. I would have rolled over my own feelings and conceded the match because I had no way of having conviction in my own instincts.

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Not now.

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Believe me, doubts have come – honest soul-searching, brutal inspection of my own desires and my claims to love God above all else. But listening to my parents tonight, validating their concerns and unhesitatingly conceding that I have not one rebuttal to their arguments, merely quietly stating what I will and will not do, and not budging an inch: I believe this comes from this months-long “separation experience” with God. I no longer rely on them or their counsel quite so heavily. I love them no less, and I take their words into careful consideration as always, but even their concerns for my mental health – which at one time would have rocked me to my core – simply couldn’t uproot my conviction.

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I feel in my deepest core, my farthest reach, my truest spirit, that I am doing what is right. Do I know how it will work out? Heck, no. Do I get really tired and lonely sometimes, knowing I can’t share this with anyone yet? You bet. But I know my God. He will make his way known to me. The closer I’ve drawn to God, the more of my life has burned away in my burgeoning desire for his presence, the surer I have become that what I knew all my life and tried to change the last few years is as true as my own name: I was made for one man and one man alone. It required thirty years of trying and failing to connect, of going on so many dates with so many different men, of feeling so persistently different that I thought I was truly defective, for me to stand on what I had already known from my childhood: it was never going to work with anyone but The One. Only one man was created, designed, just for me. And I could do all I’ve done and somehow continue to do for just one man. No other.

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And knowing as my parents don’t believe I do what I risk losing, I say with calm certainty that if B____ never came back, I would remain alone. I cannot settle for a nice man so I can get a family and some conversation at the dinner table. Even for the irreplaceable gift of having a witness to the whole of my life – I couldn’t do it. I wasn’t made that way.

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I’ve always felt different from other people because I am. I am not the rule. I am the exception. I know that from my head to my toes. That question was from God, and yes, I am willing to wait for B____ as long as it takes. Because there is no alternative. I have to be true to myself. So bring it on, you doubting Thomases, you stubbornly defiant circumstances. I am still more stubborn.

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Though the fig tree does not bud

and there are no grapes on the vines,

Though the olive crop fails

and the fields produce no food,

Though there are no sheep in the pen

and no cattle in the stalls,

Yet I will rejoice in the Lord,

I will be joyful to God my Savior.

The Sovereign Lord is my strength.

He makes my feet like the feet of a deer,

he enables me to go on the heights.

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-- Habakkuk 3:17-19

Monday, June 7, 2010

Facebook Faith - 6-7-10

A friend of mine posted this quote on her Facebook and it floored me. In all the upsets and joys of the last month, this shined through the whispered doubts and unmovable stubbornness like a ray of sun:

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“A soul mate’s purpose is to shake you up, tear apart your ego a little bit, show you your obstacles and addictions, break your heart open so a new light can get in, make you so desperate and out of control that you have to transform your life.”

- Eat, Pray, Love

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This is what I have been doing for B____. All of these things. I have done them from my side of the world, from the other side of the vast ocean that flows between us. Through prayer and joy and desperation and sheer stubbornness and faith, I have accosted God again and again for the freedom and purpose of my beloved.

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And as I write this, I suddenly see, as in a mirror, that the reverse has also been true. B____ did all this for me, too.

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Can We Say, "Issues"? - April 3, 2005

I found this old journal entry a few weeks ago. Wow. This is a full summation of the issues I struggled with for years. And some of those issues B____ cut through like tissue paper, and the rest God has healed completely. Amazing.
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April 3, 2005

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I have found it is worth nothing. All my efforts at purity, virginity, godliness, and all the rest of it. I have worked so long and so hard to build for myself a life I didn’t have to regret, a life I could look back on with my back straight and my head held high, only to find that that life is one I regret. I have more regrets than a lot of people have who didn’t work so hard to this end. All my regrets are missed opportunities, and those few regrets I have for things I actually did do aren’t so painful to think on as I had expected. The sting of them has faded so that now I don’t squint when I have to look at them, I don’t cringe. I can look at them now with calm equanimity, even humor. But the regrets for those missed opportunities, the endless list of them, has made me tired and unsatisfied, cynical and baffled. Never had it occurred to me that that would be the case, that the future I envisioned emerging from my choices should be twisted into reverse, into the negative of the pictures I so carefully shot.

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And now, I find that those good, wise, moral choices I have made for so many years have left me nothing but alone. Life is not fair, and I’ve always known this, but I hadn’t expected it to bite me in this way, from this direction. I had always heard that the things you defend from, the unplanned disasters and incidental catastrophes that you build up your walls to keep out, never come from the well-defended northern direction you’ve been watching all these years, but ooze through the cracks in the crumbling southwestern wall that you thought you never needed to worry about. They slide through like dry rot and by the time you have become aware of it and have turned toward it, it’s wormed its way through all your walls until you’re huddling in the middle of your pathetic, besieged town. That’s what I’ve found of the careful walls I built according to all the rules of solid building I’d heeded all these years. Hearing and attending to advice and warnings was never my problem. Listening was my strength. Seeing the future was not.

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When Lydia came back from California and mourned her choices to become sexually involved with her boyfriend, and warned me not to go her way, I listened. When I heard the never ending string of sermons aimed toward “young people” (inevitably centered on abstinence and sexual purity), I listened, never rolled my eyes because I had heard it a thousand times, even though I had. And even when I started to wonder if it was worth it to hold onto my virginity, and Monica said it wasn’t a waste, I listened. Not anymore. I now ask, “What is the point of saving so much? Who am I waiting for?” I think of doing romantic things with a man, and I always stop and think, “If he’s not the one, then that’s one more person who’ll be in my marriage bed,” and I freeze. And sometimes run. But look at Monica: she’s had more than a few boyfriends, and kissed and been in love with and done stuff with, and yet I have no doubt in my mind that she will be able to put on that white wedding dress and look her husband in the eyes and go without a qualm or wrinkle (like the Biblical analogy) to her marriage bed. And here I’ve abstained from so much, so that I could accomplish what Monica has been able to accomplish by simply doing what she wants and following her desires, which have been aligned with godly ideals by her upbringing and her faith, both of which I have, too. But whereas she was sanctified by her faith and upbringing and followed that sanctification in her actions, I was sanctified, and still worked like a dog. I must have been Catholic in another lifetime. And I can’t change what I’ve done, or rather not done, in my life. I can’t go back and tell myself to forget it and just follow my impulses and desires. I internalized all these years that that was bad, that that would lead you down a path to heartache and pain and loneliness and confusion. But look who’s got the heartache now. Look who’s lonely and confused now. Look who’s walking in the dark.

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And you know, I feel that I’ve worked much harder, more consistently than a lot of people to please God. I don’t know that that’s such a good thing. While guys are thinking about sex an average of 280 times a day, I’m thinking about God that much. There’s something very wrong with that, and not what you’d think. I shouldn’t be working that hard and thinking that hard on the things of God, and have gone this long with such difficulty and questions and lack of satisfaction. Doing all that should have brought me some answers or at least some peace, but I can find neither. And then I see other Christians who, sure, do think about God and try to live according to his statutes and boundaries, but aren’t chained and suffocated and tangled by it; they follow their desires and, wonder of wonders, they have a few regrets but their lives aren’t always ruined by them. I was always afraid of that. But I am at the difficult place of disagreeing with that concern I always had, but unable (yet) to change. Oh, that’s fun.

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The fact is that I have “saved” myself so completely, in so many ways (far more diligently than I needed, and I hate wasted effort), so that I would be able to have one brief, drizzling moment of my husband looking at me with pride and appreciation for the vast sacrifice I made for the length of my life. Yeah. Right. What is that one moment worth, even if it ever does come? Because let’s face it. For all the preacher talk, people just don’t hold virginity at such a high premium. There are so many gray areas between being totally virgin and being totally debauched. So many gray areas that it would take a year to fully describe them. Monica, for instance, is not as “virgin” as I am, technically, but she is just as pure. Now, how is that possible? I wonder. She has kissed guys and held hands and done whatever, and still been able to maintain that boundary and had that boundary respected without it being held against her. And she is happier and healthier than I am. I don’t hold this against her in any fiber of my being. I am not a jealous person, and I love her so much that I want her to be happy. I am happy that someone has found this marvelous balance. I am just not as happy that I haven’t found it myself. And all this sacrifice I’ve made, in the name of faith and future and fear, has left me dry and shriveled, without any instincts to call my own anymore. I never knew instincts have an expiration date. No one ever told me that.

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And now I see that in order to “get” someone, in order not to be alone for the rest of my life, I must play those games I’ve seen all my life, that I say I know how to play, that I believe I know how to play, and yet feel so unnatural playing them. The flirting and coquetry. The sidelong, meaningful glances. The subtle arts of eroticism and appeal; the million slightly different levels of seduction; the this-and-that that makes up the whole of that indefinable and unbreakable attraction between the sexes. That same attraction I’ve been watching from the outside and never taking part in. I can’t be alone anymore, but the heat that drove me the past month has fizzled into the that old familiar depression and despair of hopeless loneliness. Because I can’t hide the fact that it just does not come naturally to me. Well, let me clarify. All those little things women do, those games, I can play, and play damn good. But my strict moral boundaries prevent me from being able to play them outside the marriage relationship, with someone who is not officially my husband. But God Almighty, how am I going to get into that relationship with anyone if I don’t play my tricks beforehand? It is a conundrum to which there is no other answer than for me to go out there, as unnatural as it may feel, and flirt and trick around and coax in for all I’m worth and just tune out the wildly loud voices of morality and integrity. I have never given myself enough credit. I know this. I never trust myself to do the right thing and operate within proper, godly boundaries unless I’ve got my hands clenched right on those fences—which necessarily means I’m on the fringe of the crowd, not anywhere close to the middle of the action. I know this. I don’t give myself enough credit. But I can’t seem to change myself.

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I have far too many inhibitions, far too many thoughts that hem me in, before and behind. The only times I feel normal, like the way I would be if I wasn’t tormented by my heated, fevered brain’s workings and hypotheses and conclusions, is when I drink. When I’ve had a vodka or a martini or a glass of wine or an amaretto sour (or more than one), I can feel myself loosen up, smile more, and somehow, from somewhere, words come out of my mouth that sound NORMAL. Laughing and flirting and not worried about anything, and I think, God! if I could just hold onto this! If I could just find the remote control and keep my brain on mute. It’s only that I don’t think of it that I’m not an alcoholic by this point, because every social occasion, without exception, is exponentially easier with a couple of drinks in me. I’ll take the faint sheen of sweat through my make-up from the artificially created heat wave inside my skin from the fierily reacting alcohol—no problem, baby. It’s all good. No worries, hey, you want my number? Sure, hey, call me sometime? You want to go now? I want to skinny-dip in the river. Let’s go find a river. God! If I could just do that. See, my problem—and it really is a problem, when you think about it—is that I can be the most intoxicating blend of woman—sweet and sassy, wild and winsome, fiery and faithful, calm and crazy—if I can just lean into a relationship. But there is no way I can get to that warm, soft middle until I go through the land mines in the wasteland that rims it. And the only way to get through them is to be that way before I’m comfortable being that way. People will always give you the After-School Special line of “Don’t do anything you’re not comfortable with.” Well, hell, if I listened to that with the same careful attention I have for 26 years, I’ll never do anything. I’ll never go anywhere. I’ll never be with anyone. I’ll never get to that point where I’m comfortable. So then I think (always thinking, dammit!) I should just always drink before hand so I can rack up enough encounters to make me comfortable, because when I drink, especially hard liquor, God, I love what it does to me, I AM with the general public the way I am with my close friends and family. And that’s what I’ve always been trying to show, but my damned inhibitions never cease to interfere with that neat, ambitious plan. But then I think, Is that how I want to make friends and lovers? Do I want to be that person who is only comfortable when she drinks? That’s dysfunctional, in desperate need of some serious therapy, pathetic, and a big, fat red flag for anyone who is entertaining any rosy thoughts of getting involved with me, which is the whole freaking POINT of all of this run-around! You see? This is what I’m talking about. It’s this godforsaken thinking that is ruining everything. I wouldn’t even need to drink if I could turn my brain off, or at least down. So I’m thinking this could be (a) another thinking jag that seems like it could be a revelation to liberate me and change my life but in actuality is just another smokescreen for a life that will never change but is desperate for it, or (b) the real thing; the real revelation that could liberate me and change a life that’s desperate for it. Three guesses as to which one I always hope it is. Three guesses as to which one it always is. God! I’m pathetic, holding on to something so ephemeral for that ridiculously brief, pale moment of my husband’s pride. And the thing is, the damnedest thing is, that a lot of people out there gave it away a long time ago and have all these regrets, and they don’t get that moment, but they work through it with their new spouse, and they resolve it, and get to the point where it just doesn’t seem to matter anymore, it’s not important anymore. You don’t HAVE to marry a megalomaniacal jerk who can’t deal with the idea that he’s not the first. In fact, you’d be hard-pressed to find someone who would bat an eye at your lack of virginity. They’d be pretty gosh-darned impressed that you hadn’t had sex with them until the wedding night. That’s more than enough virginity for most men, let’s face it. What just cracks my skull is that I’ve been sacrificing this much and working this hard and holding myself to such a high and holy standard for so long, as I’m supposed to have done—ha!—for such little reward. It just blows your mind! People talk about how wounding premarital sex can be in a marriage, but good Lord, it can’t be categorically insurmountable, or no one would do it because they’d know they’d never get through it! I agree, it can be serious, but I think all these years, I’ve built it up to be a Goliath when it wasn’t even a David. And the thought of that just makes me so bitterly disgusted. Disgusted that I didn’t just try hard enough, but I tried far too hard, and sacrificed far more than I needed to. I’ve always gotten very angry at waste, and this is flagrant waste. Arrogant, heedless waste to think I could have forever to make up for the losses. At this point, even if I started gouging life for all its pleasures and parties, I’ll never make up for it. I’ll never have my youth back. I’ll never have those painfully teenage moments of puppy love, then young love, then wrong love, then real love. I’ll never have my fresh, young instincts that are what gets you through the rig-a-marole of “does he like me, I don’t know, maybe I’ll tell him, maybe I won’t, ohmygodhe’scomingover!” I’ll never be young again. And I wasn’t even young the first time around. How bitter that can make you. I won’t listen anymore to those people who try to warn me with their regrets. They can’t possibly know the regrets I have, the regrets that come from missing opportunity after opportunity with a careless abandon that is almost obscene. And in fact, with irony that is just as obscene, the only regrets that have come about from my doing anything came from my uncontrolled fantasy life, which sprang from my frustrated desires and impulses that were caged by my inability to do anything. So not only do I have mounds of regrets from not doing things in my life and taking opportunities, but I have bitter regrets from what I did when I couldn’t do anything—because I couldn’t do anything in reality, I retreated into fantasy and sowed some of my bitterest regrets with that same unthinking flagrance. How messed-up is that?

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So here I am, growing older, with a missing youth that no amount of milk carton pictures can bring back again, alone, always alone, and disgusted with myself and my pure choices. I value reputation and what people think well of me, but I have only been able to see in extremes, and I haven’t been able to do anything Miss Mary Sunshine wouldn’t do for fear of ruining my testimony. Well, take a good, long look at Monica Taylor, who is actually a more engaging Christian than me because of her variety. So why should I worry? Why not just give myself over to my own impulses? I’ve certainly spent enough time and effort and tears trying to align myself with God that I shouldn’t have much to worry about, right? I should be able to go on and trust that I will never even go up to the fences, let alone climb right over them. I don’t know why I should accuse myself with such indistinct insistence of being a hedonist, a bohemian hippie who has no sense of boundaries. A lifetime of my upbringing and my unflagging efforts to be what God calls me to be should be enough to convince me that it would actually be harder to go over those boundaries than it ever would have been to just rush into the action. And look how hard it is for me to rush in. That should be a comfort, but somehow, it’s just depressing. And to add salt to the wound, insult to injury, I feel that God has abandoned me, isn’t taking care for me in this. He is arranging everyone else’s life, the lives of all those people who give him moderate effort, but as for me, who is killing myself to follow every commandment not to be proud of myself but to please him, I see no hint of a fingerprint of his on these enormous issues in my life. I can’t remember the last time he did something in my heart, the last time I felt something, and I’m dying from the lack of feeling something. One reason why my need for a lover is stepped up to an almost unbearable degree—I need to feel something. I’ve lived too long of my life stroking down that desire so I can function. I can’t do that anymore, and I can’t feel anything for God, and I certainly don’t feel anything from him. We aren’t even roommates. He arranged some things when I first came back to him, and he arranged this life I have around me now—job, apartment, car, cat, life—but now he has gone off to dote on some other devotee, leaving me here in my hot, dry liturgy, with only deadened Scripture as a comfort. I thought maybe he was using that withdrawal of his to fire my motivation to get out there and find a man, but that fire burned itself out in my burn-out with my job. Now the burn-out with my job has eased, but the fire for a man has slumped into this all-too-familiar pattern of philosophical talk and dark, silent brooding, with no action in between.

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My conclusion: what conclusion would actually come to fruition, in reality? What conclusion should I bother with when I don’t really believe any would become reality? But my spirit calls out with the desperate thirst of a man in the desert for some conclusion, some end in sight to this misery and turmoil, even if it only burns me as it sizzles into insubstantial steam in the sun. So I have only to say that I need to start devouring life, start living as if I really was drunk, and not worry about how I sound or how my testimony is affected. I need to flirt and play games and pull tricks with men to cull them from where they cluster together. I need to harden even as I show them my softness. I need not to be afraid, as I always have been, of my power as a woman, of my ability to bewitch a man. I’ve done it. I can easily do it. It’s not the lack of that that has fostered my hopelessness that I’ll ever get a man. It’s my inability to do that before I’m in a relationship. But that’s so messed up, there isn’t even a term strong enough to express it. I need to open my eyes and watch and keep watching as I send out signals like a bitch in heat and see a man respond and start toward me and stand my ground until he reaches me and not run and give him a piece of myself, even something as tiny as a phone number, and not run and go on a date with him and talk with him on the phone and flirt by saying totally unoriginal things that a million other women have said throughout history but will be seen as enchanting because this man is under my spell and not run and brush his arm and peek through my long eyelashes and let a smile curve on my glossed, pouty lips as I am fully aware of the power and tired unoriginality of each gesture and not run and let him kiss me and kiss him back and not run and not want to run and see his little idiosyncrasies and breathe in and out and accept them and not run as I’ve always run when I’ve seen those and know that I am just like every other women, and that’s okay, despite my heated desire to stand out, because I’d rather be like every other women and not be alone, than be a true original with no one around to appreciate it.

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Right . . .

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I’ll put that on my list right after finding a cure for cancer.